DadraFromFrance
Well-known member

Broooooooooooooooooooock is back !!!! o
Steve H,
Just as a point of reference, one of our semi-regular posters, Bino Boy, purchased the 10x32s and did post some brief comments on this thread. If I were to take a stab at summarizing his observations he felt they were the optical equivalent of the 8x32s with the understanding of the usual differences between an 8x and 10x binocular of a given objective size.
Still using mine almost daily...in addition to a pair of Opticron 6x30s.
Calling Dr. Kevorkian, Calling Dr. Kevorkian. Please pull the plug on this thread. Mercy!
Oh geesh Brock, you haven't changed. Just out of curiosity, where have you been? ....Not that I have been around much lately either.
Bluespiderweb,
Thank you for posting the direct link. It will certainly make things easier.
Well, if you really must know, I was busy protecting the town of Christmas from various enemies including the Weeping Angels, which takes a lot of vigilance. Big Red, the local park's winter resident hawk that I feed, got chased out of the area about 10 days ago by GOLILITH, the largest female red-tail I've ever seen, so that freed up some time to read and post a bit. But I'm still pretty busy with other stuff, so you won't see me post as often as before.
Where have you been?
Congratulations! on passing the 1,000 post mark.
Brock
UPDATE: BIG RED IS BACK! She ate a heated, raw turkey thigh this morning and didn't leave even a smidgeon of meat on the bone. All that sex must have worked up her appetite. Red-tails mate in late winter, so she was probably off making babies for 12 days, which is a long time since red-tail mating only takes 5-7 seconds! But there's lots of ritual involved including grabbing each others talons in flight. Must be fun to watch! Anyway, I'm glad she's okay and didn't get maimed or killed by GOLILITH.
Brock,
Late winter around here begins in February and March. That's when I've seen the courtship rituals of the pair which reside in my area.
The male is darker and has a wide dark belly band. The female is classically light colored with a sparse belly band and looks just like the one shown on the e-mail icon on my MacBook Pro. And when they are going though their mating rituals the light colored one is visibly larger so I know it is the female. I see the male more often during the spring nesting season.
They have been around here for about 4 years. The area near my house has large woodlots, a farm and couple of large cemeteries not far from the nearby corridor of Interstate 81 with its thermals which runs along the western boundary of the Poconos and State Game Lands. The Susquehanna River flats are a mile to the east.
I have seen the female flying over my house accompanied by a fledgling in early summer a few times.
Bob
The ergonomics for my hands are very close to perfect
..............
So here's what I want to know now... Are the 10x42 Sightron's as good as these 8x32's? If they are, I'm probably going to get a pair.
Which specific Sightron 10X42 model are you considering?
Sightron did market an 8X42 and a 10X42 in the SII Blue Sky series but they were discontinued about a year or so ago. I own the 8X42 BS SII and it is about as good as the 8X32 in the series. Based on that, I ordered the 10X42 but returned it. My comments on the 10X42 are in item 3 of the following post ....
http://www.birdforum.net/showpost.php?p=2745175&postcount=4
Never tried the 10x42s...just the 8x42s and 8x32s. I really haven't found an inexpensive to moderately priced 10x42 that I liked (one sample of the ZR ED3 being the exception).
As for Brock and his glove box comment. Phooey.
I don't care how well balanced the SFs are...they still have a bigger footprint than sasquatch.
![]()
How many samples of that ED3 did you have to buy to get a good 'en?
I've got hands as big as Sasquatch's, so I would probably be delighted with the feel of the SF, and it's not heavy despite its bulk, but I keep thinking about the prison time I might do if I get caught knocking off the local 7-Eleven.
I wish you had bought five samples of the 8x32 Sightron BS II like you have other Chinbins so I could buy one pre-vetted to make sure the focuser is smooth, because if there's one thing I cannot tolerate in a pair of binoculars it's a stiff or hard to turn in one direction focuser since I mostly do close-in birding, which requires a lot of focusing.
justanosepicker
How many samples of that ED3 did you have to buy to get a good 'en?
I've got hands as big as Sasquatch's, so I would probably be delighted with the feel of the SF, and it's not heavy despite its bulk, but I keep thinking about the prison time I might do if I get caught knocking off the local 7-Eleven.
I wish you had bought five samples of the 8x32 Sightron BS II like you have other Chinbins so I could buy one pre-vetted to make sure the focuser is smooth, because if there's one thing I cannot tolerate in a pair of binoculars it's a stiff or hard to turn in one direction focuser since I mostly do close-in birding, which requires a lot of focusing.
justanosepicker
Quick ? For Frank, or any others. Has anyone here done a direct comparison between the Sightron 8x32 and a Leupold Mohave 8x32 ( the closed bridge Mohave, not the new open bridge one)?
And what was your consensus concerning optical differences.
Thanks